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mA A u mos +eana PAGE TWO Che Casper Daily Tribune By J.B. HANWAY AND EB. HANWAY Issued Bvery Evening @xcept Saturday ubii Bitg 216 Kast Second street. Casper. Wyo, Eentered at Casper (Wyoming) postoffice as second class matier November 22, 1916 Business Telephones -. = a Ase Branch Telephone Exchange Connecting All Departments MEMKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press !s exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all news credited in this paper and algo the local news published herein Member of Audit Burean of Cireutation (A B.C.) National Advertising Representatives Prudden. King & Pridden. 17020-28 Stoxer Bldg.. Chicago Ave. New York (City Globe Ridg. Boston San Francisco. Cal Leary Bldg. Seattle W merce Ridg. Los Angeles New York, Chicago. Boston and San welcome, mt 607 Montgomery St and Chamber of Com SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier and Mall The Casper Dally Tribune, every evening except Saturday ne Year daily and Sunday 3ix Months. daily and Sunday ene reece taen woonene 3,i0 dne Month. daily and Sunday . jreceecaececerecencennacenccons 64 Ine Week. daily and Sunday .. een The Casper Herald every morning except Monday ne Year. dally and Sunday — 3ix Months dally and Sunday ——..--------. ne Month dally and Sunday One Week. dafly and Sunday Right Kind of Friends The adjective Chesterfieldian—suave, polished—comes to us, you may or may not know, from Lord Chesterfield, English courtier and wit, who lived from 1694 to 1778. He had a place in posterity because of letters he wrote to his son, teaching and preaching the gosnel of the graces. The letters now nenrly rs old, are as pertinent today as they were One of them per- two hundred yer the day he wrote them. Wisdom never di tains to the matter of choosing one’s friends: People of your age liaye, commonly, an un- arded frankness about them which makes them the easy prey of the artful and experienced, They look upon every ‘nave or fool, who tells them he is their friend, to be really so. And pay that prof ‘on of simulated frien? "> with an indiscreet and unbounded confidence, ~'~avs to their own loss, often to their ruin. Beware, therefore, now that you are coming into the world, of those proffered friendsh'ns. Receive them with civility, but with incredulity too: and pay them with compli- ments. but not with confidence. Do not make your vanity and self-love reke you suppose that people become your friends at first sieht, or even upon short acquaintance. “Real friendship is a slow grower: an never thrives un- less ingrafted upon a stock of krown and 2ciprocal - erit. There is another kind of nominal friendship among young people, which is warm for the time, but by gcod ~ .ck, of short duration. This friendship is hastily produced, by their being accidentally thrown together ... they tell one another all they know, and often more too, when, of a sudden, some accident disperses them, and they think no more of each other unless it be to betray and laugh at their unprudent confidence. Remem- ber to make a great difference between companions and friends; for a very complaisant and agreeable companion may, and often does prove a very improper and very dangerous friend.” There is a Spanish proverb, “Tell me where you live and I will tell you who you are.” Not without reason do people im a great-degree, form their opinion of you, upon that which they haye of your friends. Past Versus Future Byron would have us believc that the best of prophets of the future is the past, but history rather forces us to the conclusion that you can never plan the futvve by the past. Man is not allowed to know what will happen tomorrow and the mind that always is anxious about the future is forever miserable. It seems wise to accept Hc.ace’s advice and, “Cease nat the future has in store and take as a gift what- brings forth.” William Hazlitt was one who could not accept the mighty difference in the value which mankind usually sets upon the past and the future. In one of his innumerable critical essays he conceives that the past is as r substantial a part of our being, that it is as much a bona fide, undeniable con- sideration in the estimate of human life, as the future can pos- sibly be. This is true because the present is the living sum- total of the past, “Neither in itself nor as a subject of general contempla- tion, has the future any advantage over the past,” he wrote, “But with respect to our grosser passions and pursuits it has, as far as regards the appeal ‘o the understanding ov the im- agination, the past is just as good, just as real, of as much intrinsic ue,” he repeats, “a. the future, but there is an- _ other principle in the human mind, the principle of action or will; and of this the past has no hold, the future engrosses it entirely to itself. “It is this strong lever of the affections that gives so pow- erful a bias to our sentiments on this subject and violently transposes the natural order of our associations, We regret ures we have lost, and eagerly pate those which ve escaped—and dread futur in. T’e good that -is past is in the sense like money that is spent, which is of no further use and about which we ive ourselves little concern. The good we expect is like a store yet untouched, and in the enjoyment of which we promise ourselyes infinite grati fication.” ‘ Big Postal Business The Christmas business of 1925 broke all records in the prstal service, receipts for fifty selected cities totalling $38,- Gf) 752, an increase of $4,506,774, over December, 1924, Jackson- 752. ville, Fla., had the largest percentage of increase with ¥an Francisco had the smaliest with 5.47 per cent. Still Doubtful Despite the president's optimism on the subject, there con- ues grave anxiety in Washington over the Mexican land and @l legislation, which at present violate existing treaties. The yernment has denied the right of an American citizen to Vaaive his nationality as proposed by the Mexican bill, Other pticles are said to violate the natural rights of foreign prop- owners in Mexico and to threaten loss of property by itrary legal assumption. Opposed to Recognition The department of state believes American business inter- gets are in accord with its policy of non-recognition of Rus- sia, several American business men having urged the depart- ment officials not to extend recognition to the soviet govern- ment while not a single request from business men for recog- nition had been received. Man entering the poar house met a friend he had not seen for twenty years. He found the other man hadn't advertised either. There is just one discouraging thing about being an in- surgent, and that is to constantly find something else to be peeved about, Automobiles and intoxicants and the combination of the two are blamed by Warden Charles Linscott of the Rhode Island State Prison for the increase of 50 per cen* in the num- ber of prisoners in 1925 qver 1924, and the number committed in 1925 being 135, Publication Offices: Tribune wewewenenae-l5 and 16 270 Madison Copies of the Dally Tribune are on file in the Francisco offices and visitors are Who’s Who Recent news dispatchas concern: ing Prince Carlo’s abdication of his rights to the Roumaniam throne, bring his mother, Queen Marie into prominence once-——aaas — | x more, Ever since the day 83 years’? ago when sho be- came the bride of Crown Prince Fers linand, now king,! & she has begn of In- sernattonal inter. F est, Being called! “the match-mak-|~ ing queen" jt has’? often been raid that she desired & @ match between “t= E her daughter Ne- QUEENMARIE ana and the Prince of Wales. Now that Carol has gotten himself into disrepute by his esca- pades it is unilkely that the English rulers would countenance an alll ance between the crown prince and a princess whose brother had re. nounced his claim to the throne, furthermore present rumors hint at an engagement between Wales nd Princess Astrid of Sweden, Queen Marie was Marie Alexan drine Victoria, Princess of Great Britain and Ireland nd Grand Duchess of Saxony and seventeen when she became engaged to the crown prince of Roumania and now King Ferdinand. She has always been powerful in politics and in the World War her influence was felt in many quarters. She was the first woman in her country to don a nurse's uniform and care for wound, ed soldiers, Queen Marie is also a factor in other countries, being called “the Mother‘in-Law of the Balkans," as one of her daughters is the exiled queen of Greece and the other queen of Jugos'!avia, Agitating Farmers The opposents of protection realize that one of its sheet anchors in this country is the farmers. Try as they may, these opponents of protection meet with little or no success in -ndeavoring to make farmers fee] that they are the vic: tims rather than beneficiaries of our protective tariff, The propagany dists of free-trade therefore for years past have concentrated upon the farmers, whom they seem to be- Neve they can wean away from their abiding faith In protection, Busy- bodies in Washington are sending over the wires this and that state- ment, this and that misstatement, almed at the farmers, and all de- signed to make them think that the industrialists, the urban-dwellers, the great home market for American Products which is equal to and far superior to all the rest of the world’s markets put together, many times over, are forever exploiting the farmers for their own advantage. Let four or five million industrial. ists lose employment because of hard times engendered by a near free trade, tariff, let the earnings of American industrial workers fall off fitteen to twonty million dollars a day or four or five billion dollars @ year, as & sonsequence, and who, next to the Industrialists themael- ves, would suffer most? Our farm. ers! Contented United States—content- ed because prosperous, and prosper: ous because of our protective tariff —consumers In the aggregate about one-half of all that ts consumed in the world—115,000.000 Americans consume about as much as do 1,500, 000,000 throughout the roast of the world. It {s the most sought for market by other peoples; despite our protective tariff the goods of other nations find their way into our mar- ket in ever-increasing quantities, the tremendous purchasing power of our people enabling them to disre gard the tariff and purchase far more than otherwise they could pos- sibly purchase: but for the existence of the protective tariff—that unfa'l- ing stimulus to employment at home =the great bulk of whose earnings {a spent at home, a tremen ‘ous por tion of it upon the products of our farms, to the enrichment of ‘our farmers, Protection stimulates diversifica. tion of production; and when diversl- fieatlon becomes more sclentifically adjusted, when our farmers cease producing surpluses they haye to sell abroad and for which they are foreed to accept world prices and devote themselves to raising things they can produce but that we now import then they will realize better than ever the beneficent effects of an adequate protective tariff. ails Ba Jobe Ad ae Foreign Monopolies In discussing the British govern: ment monopoly of raw rubber, and other government contro] over other principal commodities Secretary sald: “This development threatens not only the sane progress of the world, but contains in it great dangers to international good will. The world has often enough seen attempts to set up private monopolies, but it is not until recent years that we have seen governments revive a long forgotten relic of medinevaliem and of war-time expediency by del!ber- ately erecting official controls of trade in raw materials of which their nationals produce a major por: tion of the world's supply, and through these controls arbitrarily fixing prices to all of the hundreds of millions of other’ people in the world. “Tt is this intrusion of govern: ments into trading operations on a vast scale that raises a host of new dangers—the inevitable aftermath of any such efforts by political agencies to interfere with the normal processes of supply and demand. Our experience of the last twelve months with these controls has de- veloped a series of fundamental questions which we can no longer lgnore and upon which we must de- termine a national policy. These questions concern the welfare of consumers in fifty or more nations. “We cannot solve these by Acquiescence or acceptance and we will only compound and aggravate them by retaliatory action. On the other hand, if we are able to evolve the basis for a broad constructive solution I believe we shall also make an Important practical contribution be Casper Daily raw materials—Egyptian long staple cotton, camphor, coffee, ‘lodine, nitrates, potash, mercury, rubber and sisal. At present prices, if we maltain our present rate of consump- tion, these commodities will cost us about $1,200,000,000 for 1926, “There are twenty or thirty other commodities in the world which could likewise be controlled by ac- tlon of one government or by agree: ment between two governments, In fact. it 1s possible thus to control a ry large portion of the raw ma- terlal which we import. - “Not only have our American policies been opposed to such activi; ties by the government (wiltness the cosntitutiona! prohibition to such ex- port taxes, which is one of the means commonly employed in carry- ing out such governmental controls), but we have not countenanced them by private enterprise, “The object of these controls is universally asserted to be to stabilize prices to both producer and con: gumer at fair rates, and we would probably not be considering the question today if all these combina- tions had been content with fair re- turns, no matter how much we might object to them in principle, | Our dominant desire has been to get along with our neighborg without engaging in the slightest friction, and we would bear a great deai to ayold involving our government in such bickering of trade. “But when we witness prices sud- denly boosted far above what even the spokesmen of the controls have announced to be ‘fair’ by an addi- tional amount which at recent prices if continued would for the increase above ‘fair’ alone cost our consumers annually from $500,000,000 to $800,- 000,000, depending upon the price assumed then, we may well conclude | that elther these controls possess | that Inherent quality of all monop- | ollas—never to be content with rea- sonable prices—or that speculators | have selzed charge of them and driven prices to unreasonable levels. In any event we can well queation whether the Nation Is safe In assum- ing that reasonable prices will con- tinuously result from any such con- trol, “It has been suggested that we might set up such combinations in our own country over materlals which we control either singly or jointly with one or two other major producers, thus getting our share of the profits in this game, Any such policy would not only involve us in a thousand frictions in international relations but we would have done grave injustice to others, “In my own mind I reject all such suggestions. We can better organize our purchases and oyr distribution among our consumers and fortunate- ly, the natural resources of the world, the Inventiong of science and the wealth of our country are such that we could, with proper organiza- tion, build up competitive sources of supply in most cases.” World Topics “Europe is racing for time be tween two sets of wars," observed Shaw Desmond, Irish novelist, in a recent speech in this country, ‘the “If the war between forces and the Fa- cist! starts first the world war will be ‘indefinitely postponed; other- wise nothing can prevent the world % war for which the 5 whole world ts Preparing at the present time," de- % clared Desmond,' “We must face the 3 Red tions abroad are preparing for war.’ Sentimental- ity, mere hoping ‘or peace, nevér will get the world anywhere, and, as it haa been shown in the past few years, never will." “Democracy in Europe has ceased to exist. It is now as much a by- word as the feudal system. “When the nations of the world spoke about democracy, brotherhood, fraternity and disarmament the: really believed that such existed. the speaker asserted, “but the war showed things to be different. With the fall of democracy Mussolini has risen to dictator of Italy and dicta- tor of the Roman Empire that is to come.” He described Mussolini as a “man of destiny a prototype of Napo- leon. He spoke of him as “deadly sincere’ and compared him to Lloyd George, Winston Churchill and Arts- tide Briand. “Mussolini is the one man who is capable of believing in the logic of the situation and of coming out and stating it. Lioyd George, Winston Churchill and the leaders of the Fa- cist! in Spain and Germany belleve in the conditions as Mussolini sees them, but none of them are willing to declare the facts.” “The time will come when Musso: Int will dictate to every man and woman in Italy,” he declared. “Mus- solint saw that a Parliament Is a deadly thing to distatorship; so he t himself above Parliament. Even hia death will not end his power In Italy. There fs a strong feeling against him, but no one has a chance to show it."* “The Facist! movement {s spread: ing throughout Europe to Spain, England, France and Germany, In England, nearly 600 men and women are joining the movement each day, all of them organized for the fticht that Is coming. And In France the Facisti has grown to such an extent that T bellieve we will see a dictator ruling the French nation within five or ten year One and Twenty By ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN, When I was one-nnd-twenty I heard a wise man say, “Give crowns and pounds guineas But not your heart away; Give pearls away and rubtes, But keep your fancy “ree.” Mut I was one-and-twenty, No use to talk to me, and When T was one-and-twenty I heard him say again, The heart out of the bosom Was never given in vain; to the promotion of stable inter national relationships. “There are at present governmont- ally controlled combination in nine Tis patd with sighs aplenty And sold for endless rue.” And I am two-nnd-twenty, And, ob, ‘tis true, ‘tis true. ridburne METHU Than Srem Ova Gam. \, Bon {ianicanen Pen May FORTY-NINE Her heart was beating so furlous- ly that it seemed Wyman Holt must hear it and ,now how he had dis- turbed her; but Laurel, without dar- ing to look him in the eyes, ‘some- how managed to convey the I!m- pression that she was calm and un- moved by his question. As if her attention had been elsewhere, perhaps on the scarcely audi- ble conversation Marion was car: rying on over the telephone in the hall, she affected not to have under. stood him: “You must excuse me, Wyman, but ['m afraid I didn't hear what you said.” His smile sharpened. “I sald that it is frequently convenient not to heat.” He was still standing, and one of his hands played delicately with the filigree top of the gold sugar-bow!l, . Laure! raised an arm carelessly and pointed to his left: ‘Perhaps that chair would be more comfort- able.” Wyman, smiling broadly again, made a slight bow that was a cari- eature, and pulled the chair close to the lounge upon which she was’ sitting. “You know very well what I said, but I shall repeat it. . . ‘ow that you have enticed me here by subterfuge, are you very, very glad to see me?" Laurel strained a little more to hear what Marton was saying, hop- ing that the conyersation was near its end. “As always, Wyman," she sald after a moment, “you are very impudent and presumptuous,” “And you, dear Laurel, are as al- ways, charming, irresistible, clever, and yet oblivieus,"' She wanted to say something very cutting, but all she could think of at the moment was, “Your conceit ig as colossal as ever,” “You used to rather like me and my conceit, Laurel," Ho bent very close to her now, “I don't belleve that all of —. Laurel held up a warning finger: she had just hear Marton hang up the receiver, ‘Please, Weman —.” He sat up in his chair and took a niece of crystallized ginger to nibble. Laurel took a clean eup and saucer from the lower shelf of the serving: wagon and poured hot tea for Mar- ton. She determined that no tele- phone call or anything else should Mace her alone with Wyman Holt ogein ... What was keening Mar- fon? . .. Some trick of. her mind caused her to remember hersellf and Paula Yancey as eavesdroppers and she wondered {f this was the 2x- planation of the delay in Marion's return, “Did you arrange for Marion te dis. ppear, too? Wyman remarked, with the same insinuating glint in his eye. i Instinctively Laurel pressed a fin- yer to her lips, and then realized that if Marion were peeping thrdugh the door hangings she could see|this sign. After a hesitant moment, ishe got up and went to the door, ther heart pounding. She had no idea\ of what to do if she discovered Marion Ustening in, Rellef suffused her when she saw Marion was not in probably had gone up stairs. ‘Wyman Holt rose and walked to meet her as she returned to the tea: wagon. She halted and they stood gazing at each othor Ike two hostile animals. Impulsively he spole out, deeply moved: “Laurel, I know how unhappy you are! How long are you going to keep up th's farce?” ‘The woman's eyes that were upon him closed with prin, and she slowly shook her head. For a minute she stood like a statue. “Ah, Wyman, if you love ma—as you say you do— please, oh, please, don't persecute nie like this.” As she uttered the words she had the sense of making some terrible admission, “Then you do love me!" She held cut her arms to keep him back. “I love Noble Harwood. Tam his wife. And——." She turn. ed back toward the door, with the {dea of fleeing. She had taken sev- eral steps when Marion appeared at the portal. “Oh, I thought you——” Laurel hexan. “II must make a telephone call." She hurried out in tho hall as Marion walked slowly toward Wyman, aroused. “I'm all excited about the ball,” he ventured, at the same time mak- ing an end of the plece of ginger that was now warm and sticky. Preoceupled, Marion answered him mechanically, “I am, too.” “Is it too early to ask for dances— all you have to spare?" he sald, catching her eye, She d'd not smile. “You may have the first.’ Laurel, who had been having a wretched time of it in the hall, re- entered the Mbrary. “I poured a warmer cup of tea for you, dear,” she told Marion, “I don’t think T want any." Mar. ton took’ up a cake and nibbled at it. Business To look their best. The regular use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by touches of Cuticura Ointment when required, keeps the complexion fresh and free from eruptions, the hair live and glossy and the hands soft and smooth, Cuticura Talcum is fragrant and refreshing, an ideal | toilet powder. | Seep 2. Ointment 2 and toe. Talcum Za where. je each Aa post pet Toni mew Cc wing Stick 25c, Wyman ‘extracted a clgaret case and offered *t around, Laurel, atill standing, declined, Marion accept- ed. “1 thought you smoked, Laurel,” he sald, “I don't care for cigarets, And besides, Noble doesn't like te have me smoke,” Marion glanced at her contempt ously and exhuled a gush of smoke as Laurel said, “I shall have to ask you two to excuse me...., You must come to tea again soon, Wy- man.” He bowed slightly as he arose in courtesy, Marion watched Wyman as his eyes followed Laurel fror the room. *¥You think a lot of Laurel, don’t you?” ‘she asked slowly. Wyman ,was equal to the occa- sion, “Only because she is your stepmother,” He had not seated himself and he advanced and took her free hand. “Come take a spin on the river road with me.” Marion calmly pulled the hand free and gushed another cloud of smoke. “No, I don't want to—." | was furious. She She was sure of her susp'cions; there was something bo tween Laurel and Wyman Holt. No wonder Laurel had been so willing to invite Wyman to come here, And she herself had been foolish enough to leave them alone. “Well, have dinner with me this evening at the country club, and go to a show?” “No, I don't want to... ." Jeal- ousy was gnawing at her heart. (To Be Continued) In the next instalment: Makes a Begging Call. —__-—-—————— Bernice Subser’be for the Tribune-Herald, morning, evening and Sunday, 25c ber week. * youu appetite . REMEMBER, how it used to he when you could herdly wait for mealtime? And then, sit down and eat several helpings of every- thing—enjoy every morsel and get up from the table feeling satisfied with the World, happy with every- body and ready for anything. But what a difference in living when even the sight and smell of food sickens you! Never hungry— no matter how tempting the food is —nothing tasting right. And then, after nibbling at a few bites, feel- ing worse than ever. Oh, life is hardly worth living this way. And yet, all in the World the matter with you is that you- are starving for rich, red blood. Ii acknowledged everywhere that 8. S. helps Nature build these althy red-blood-cells by the mil- lions! All you need to do to get back that won- derful appetite is tv build rich, red-blood- calls with S. S. 8. It’s simple. Just try it, like Laaeao are do- fg every day. See for yours chat 8.8. 8, will do roel _ 5. S.S. means blood with a punc! —brimful of now life and pie Get your S. S. S. at any good drug- gist, The larger size is more eco- nomical, TODAY ORDER THE HENVEP POST LATEST NEWS BEST FEATURES 10 PAGES COMICS ON SATURDAY /7DAYS A WEEK Delivered Anywhere in Casper 65c Per Month g EARL KEENAN Agent Office at Pep’s 146 S. Center. Phone 18 . Salt Creek Busses Leave Casper, Townsend Hotel Sam.andip mandi pm Leave Salt Creek Bam. 1p. m and ép. m Express Bus “eaves 9:30 Daily Salt Creek Transportation Co. BAGGAGE AND £XPRESS TELEPHONE 144 MONDAY, Lassiter Proposed Major General William Lassiter, army commander of the Panama Canal Zone, who has been suggested to replace General John J. Pershing as head of the Tacna-Arica plebisc!- tary commission, Is one of the ar- my's best administrators and when General Pershing was chief of staff he selected Lassiter as assistant ghief. General Lassiter served with the Vera Crug expedition, as mili: tary attache at the American em- bassy in London, during the world war and rose to the grade of major general, and halds the distinguished service medal for “marked success’ of his commands in France. a A National Asset A magazine writer intimates that Herbert Hoover is the greatest human asset the country has when it eomesa to the achievement of the public good. When there is some: thing big to be done in a political and efficient way a general call for Herbert Hoover is heard, It is ad- mitted that he ‘is a poor politician, JANUARY 11, 1926 but .he is possibly the most valu: citizen within our national borders, 3250,000 For COLT REFUSED NEW, YORK, Jan. 114.—()—Tho New York Sun says today it has learned W, R. Coe, well known turt- man, refused an offer of $260,000 for his renowned three-year-old colt, Pompey, champion money winner, of 1825, as a two-year-old. Mr, Coe de- clined to disclose the identity of the sponsor of the offer but expressed the conviction he could have ob- tained a record price of $275,000 for the colt if negotiations had been pursued. ‘The present record of $265,000 was made when the late Major August Belmont purehased Tracery from an Argentine breeder. i —— A 3-line Tribune-Herald Classified Ad run one time brought 35 replies yesterday. Ae mun t Woeter Phone 1151. allah A a a Ok NEIGHT “My Husband, My Brothers, My Father and Myself All Use and Praise This Won- derful Medicine,” Declares Happy Denver Woman. “I just feel like it's my duty to tell every sick, distressed person I can about Karnak, for five bottles of thie wonderful medicine haye been worth their weight in gold to me,” declares Mrs. Ed. Saunders, of 4738 Clay St., Denver. “Lye gone up in weight from 101 to 107 pounds already and am gain- ing more every day,” continued Mrs. Saunders. “Oh, I just neyer felt better in my life than 1 do now. “For more than ten years 1 had suffered trom stomach trouble and indigestion, and I just got where I could hardly eat enough to keep body and soul togethers It just seemed like the very sight of food filled me up. and if I did manage to eat a mouthful or two I would suffer for hours afterward, operating as the Oil C bly. "KARNAK HAS BEEN WORTH IR GOLD 10 Me" “I suffered so much with head- aches, sharp pains across my fore- head, and was so weak and nervous that many times 1 couldn’t even do y housework. Nights {£ couldn't rest or sleep, and I was simply so misetable T didn't know what to do. “But Karnak has been such blessing to me that 1 can eat any thing 1 want, at meal time or in between meals either, and it all agrees with me perfectly. No more of those miserable headaches, and my nerves are calm and I sleep just ag restful as a child every night. I am just like a new person and go about my housework cheerful and happy. “My husband, my bfother, my father and myself all use and praise Karnak. We just .think there is nothing under the sun like it, and 1 will gladly verify this statement to anyone.” Karnak {s sold in Casper exclu- sively by Kimball Drug Stores, Inc., and by the leading druggist in every town.—Ady, A CORRECTION | Through an unauthorized action on the part of our delegate to the Casper Trades Assembly, the printing establishment of Clayton K. Reed, ity Printers, was placed on the “unfair list” of the Casper Trades Assem- In fsirness to Mr. Reed we desire to say that . his establishment is now and has always been fair to organized labor, and placing him on the unfair list was unauthorized by Pressmen’s Union. CASPER PRINTIN . G PRESSMEN AND ASSISTANTS UNION. By Z. B. AIKEN. SCRATCH PAPER | 500 Second Sheets, 20c Cut in convenient size for typewriter use. Add 8c postage on mail orders, TRIBUNE-HERALD CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 900 A, Casper to Buffalo Sheridan Stag M. FARE—$11,00. NO TRANSFERS OR LAVOVERS CASPER-SHERIDAN TRANSPORTATION CO, | saves you approximately {8 hours travel between Casper and Sheridan. ' ' | TOWNSEND HOTEL PHONE 14 Saves you approximately 12 and KR Salt Creek Transporta TOWNSEND HOTEL TRAIN SC Westbound Arri D Non OD Re bach tects a ueoe JBI) 1:60" pm. Sac ae jeparts 0. 322 ... ~-5:45 p.m 6: . mn. No ‘Sunday ins west of C sper.” ‘ Bye: CHICAGC BURLINGTON & QUINCY . Eastbound 4 Arrives Ospartes ~-8:00 p.m. CASPER TO RAWLINS STAGE CARS LEAVE DAILY AT 9:30 A, M, WYOMING MOTORWAY CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN | 9.65 p,m. FARE $12.50 hours travel between Casper awilns, Yon Company's Office PHONE 144 HEDULES m m. 4 .